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I went straight past Cottin and Desgouttes in my Georgano Encyclopaedia, thinking: "Well it will never be anything as weird as that." Even in the 1920's in the UK, parts for that must have been a bit of a challenge.

 

Wilson

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Wilson, as a maker of lorries and luxary cars they were into good quality but I was pretty confused about the coachbuilder of this "smaller" M-type. Maybe there was a "Francophile" who heard about their prewar (WW1) successes. Their bigger cars were quite progressive that time. Assume -like you- it wasn´t easy to keep it running on the island, especially later.

 

The next riddle will be a bit different, let me find the photos and you can help me with mailing the maker and model.

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Sorry, took me a while to find it on one of my harddrives. This is a car of my great-grandfather. I´d like to know the maker and model please.

Nothing has been retouched, neither the logos, nor other details, so you have the "full info".

 

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Another shot of the same car from the rear. Great-grandfather controlling grandpa who controls air pressure in the family companies own gas station.

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Ronald,

 

I wonder if it could it be missing an archer, wings and an arrow or bow and arrow as a radiator mascot? If that was the case, I might well say a Horch 8 model 350, as at various times they used all these mascots. However I have never seen one with a radiator mascot but than is on restored cars, where they may well have been remade.

 

Wilson

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Wilson,

 

I think you are very close and won this. We think it´s an Horch 8 or Audi Type R (Imperator). We are not sure which coachbuilder it exactely was (Winter, Hornig, Kathe, Gläser). The car is an 8 cyl. and it can be dated between 1928 and 1932. Our first guess was NAG-Protos 218/219 or the big 8 cyl. Brennabor, but there are stronger hints to Horch/Audi. The radiator mascot isn´t much of a problem, I think they exchanged something because the Audi "1" or archer/wings and arrows were in the way of view especially at night when they drove in the mountains/woods (animals)´, also collected a lot of snow in winter.

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Ronald,

 

I think the Brennabor straight 8 was the car that gave the Hillman serious competition in awfulness. It rarely works putting an obsolete side valve truck engine in a car.

 

Rolls Royce and Bentley tried it in a few prototypes, using the 6.5L B81 military/commercial straight eight petrol engine to replace the 4.9L straight six IOE engine, which was at the end of its life. My wife's godfather owned one of the Bentley Continental prototypes with this engine and a fairly dreadful thing it was, given that smoothness was not a prerequisite for fire engines and armoured fighting vehicles for which it was designed. Luckily RR saw the light and designed their own light alloy V8, which is still being made for various Bentleys.

 

I will have to look for an interesting photo tomorrow.

 

Wilson

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Your next one. This is a very special car indeed and would have been one of the fastest road cars of its era.

 

Wilson

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Gerd,

 

You are correct. These are wonderful cars to drive. I have never tried an 8C2900A but I drive an 8C2600 Corsa from time to time. By some margin, the nicest of all pre-war cars, especially if they have been fitted with a dog clutch gearbox. They are quick, handle well and have good brakes for the period. This is the car in the Schlumpf Museum, with a Pinin Farina body. It won the Mille Miglia in 1936.

 

Your turn.

 

Wilson

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It was the only 2900 to have a Pinin Farina body, but it didn't win the Mille Miglia looking like that, in 1936 it had a Spider Corsa body with cycle wings. The Pinin body with a soft top was added in 1939, the hard top was added by Swiss coachbuilder Martin sometime after the war. I think the proportions make sense looking at photographs of it as a soft top, but I'm not sure about the grill and nose as it is now.

 

Steve

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It was the only 2900 to have a Pinin Farina body, but it didn't win the Mille Miglia looking like that, in 1936 it had a Spider Corsa body with cycle wings. The Pinin body with a soft top was added in 1939, the hard top was added by Swiss coachbuilder Martin sometime after the war. I think the proportions make sense looking at photographs of it as a soft top, but I'm not sure about the grill and nose as it is now.

 

Steve

 

Steve,

 

I did not realise that was not the original body. The original one must be very similar to the 1935 Le Mans 8C2600 that I get to drive from time to time. I agree about the grille. I think my brother's De Mola bodied Alfa is prettier. This was built in Belgium in 1940, originally on a 6C1750 chassis but changed around 1948 to a 6B2500, as more suitable for touring. This car carried the Belgian Regent Prince Charles in the parade in Brussels to celebrate the end of WW2.

 

Wilson

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